Google and Microsoft will stop showing piracy sites on the first page of results in the UK
Google and Microsoft have both voluntarily agreed to
follow a new code in the United Kingdom to de-list piracy websites from
the front page of Google search and Bing results, as well as remove
autocomplete terms that could direct users to illegal content, according
to a report from The Telegraph.
In a statement to The Telegraph
explaining the new code, Jo Johnson, the minister of state for
Universities, Science, Research and Innovation, said, "It is essential
that [consumers] are presented with links to legitimate websites and
services, not provided with links to pirate sites.” The new code was
advocated for by various media groups along with the British government,
whose compliance (despite being voluntary) will be overseen by the
Intellectual Property Office, which notes that roughly 15 percent of UK
internet users access illegal content online.
The IPO will be able to recommend further action toward
the search engine companies this summer, with the legislation adding
fines or sanctions for non-compliance possible somewhere down the line.
The article was published on : theverge
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